nimby: home garden phenology is perhaps the essential first step for combating climate change and the loss of the ecosystems we all depend on
keep america great: Trump’s re-election *sighs* motto isn’t particularly original
prophet of doom: machine translation, like deep dreaming, yields some sinister prognostications with eschatological overtones, via Boing Boing
dyi or mend and make due: the global network of repair cafes has grown to more than sixteen hundred strong
found footage: television curator extraordinaire comes across a BBC engineering test and breaks it down to its component segments
octonions: the strange properties of eight dimensional numbers could potential reveal something fundamental about the nature of reality, via Marginal Revolution
closer: a 1991 real estate brokerage video’s vision of the future
Sunday, 22 July 2018
7x7
dark arts
Scientists could mine for evidence of dark matter indirectly by careful study of core samples from deep beneath the Earth’s surface and looking for glitches in the samples recovered.
By glitches, we don’t mean impurities or Golden Spikes in the ancient samples but rather some ghostly and microscopic structural flaw that might only be explained by interaction with membranes of dark matter that the Earth passes through. Anything sufficiently large and stable has an uptapped role as a cosmic detector for such phenomena. Research might even render us the ability to conjure up dark matter by inducing the signature types of material flaws found. Visit BLDGBLOG at the link up top for more metaphysical speculations.
Friday, 20 July 2018
the fix is in
Via an engrossing discussion on the word like gaining the status of a tmesis, from the Greek for “I cut,” as in parsed phrases “fan-f’ing-tastic” or “un-f’ing-believable,” with its premiere as a milder way to express shock and hyperbole—“un-like-sympathetic”—we learn more about the parts of speech categorised as affixes.
catagories: ๐ฌ, The Simpsons, ⓦ
for whom the bell tolls
Currently on display in the operating theatre of Berlin’s Humboldt University, Hyperallergic’s reflection upon experiencing the bleak and forlorn installation of Crystelle Vu’s and Julian Oliver’s “Extinction Gong” is certainly worth your consideration.
A litotic tribute to mark the death of an entire species, a Chao gong decorated with an hourglass annihilation symbol clangs out a sobering, echoing crash every nineteen minutes, calculated to be the average frequency that the Earth loses an insect, animal or plant—known or undiscovered—due to the intervention of humans. Attempts to upgrade the automaton to name and eulogise species as they pass has run into technical difficulties, mounting insult, certainly—but somehow fitting with humanity’s rapaciousness.
catagories: ๐ฉ๐ช, ๐, environment